The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, September 27, 1908, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 12

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PAGE FOUR IHE AUGUSIA HERALD 7tl Broad tt., August*, Q>. f*ubM*h#d «very Afternoor Ooring ihe W«*k and on Sunday Morning by THE HERALD PUBLISHING CD. Entarad at tha Augusta Poatoffice u Mail Matter o 1 the Second Cl»**. ~ EUESCRIPTION RATES Dally and Sunday. 1 ye..r $n o- Dally and Sunday. 6 month* 3.0* Dally and Sunday, 3 month* Dally and Sunday, 1 *nonth SO Dally and Sunday. 1 week 13 Sunday Harald. 1 year I.WJ Weakly Hrrald. 1 year .. TELEPHONES Bualneaa Off'ca 7 City t.ifitor aoc>*tv Editor n No communication will to* published m Tho M»r»*d unleM th* n*m* of th* write la aignod to tha article New YORK oreice—vrrrl.ml lie. lam In A*corr. Hrun«wl<-k Hiitldltl*, i-‘ Fifth Av«iiir, New T'.rk City CHICAOO Of rice—Vrrfiond I’.nnta min A«<-..,c y Ml II Kantnor, M«r, not l.nye* Building. Oit<-i.«o, 111 Tha Harald If (ha offinhU ..dvarttwlog mad Im 'A ft.- rvy •** A-p- mid ' tha fount* of 111. I.mrmd for ail l«-*ni no t)r#a and *4viftl»ln| _____ Addreaa all bu**nr»a communication* to THE AUGUSTA IIIKALD, 7*l Broad it,. Auquata. Oa. •.|r~~YOU WANT THE NEWS YOU NEED THE HERALD. - Augusta, Oa., Sunday, Sept. 27, 1908 Circulation of Ihe Herald lor 7 Months. 1908 February ..... 710,4*8 March May 243,806 June 241,829 July 241,202 August 210.700 DAILY AVERAGES. For 7 months 7,645 For Attgunt 7,846 There Is no better way to reach the home* of the prutptroun p«*o pie of this city and auction than through the columns of Tho Her ald Dally and Honda), Parti** loaving Augusta can have The Herald aent them by mail each day. Phone 297, Circulation Depart mini, if you leava Augusta, so that Tha Herald can reach you each day. Another thine Mr, Roosevelt should mn,ember: lien Tillman will aoou re turn home Did Mr. Roosevelt lock Jim Hher man up In a closet, or what has b< - come oi him? The end of Ihe dual period has liecii reached. New listen for the K.mplaiuln hlm.iii mud, From now o# Uimral Apathy will he without any folio wins In (he preal duiitlal euinpalKO Now Fulton county Is to have .t four hundred pul they will wear stripes end work on the roads. Now that Hie nmremltn* » are ahoul gone lets urn our attention to per simmons. Now |i has develig.nl ilint the may or of Ttmpson. Trisa, who pets a nulary of only |l a year. Is u woman. —— » » <>» rteaplte Mr Taft's sire he cuts only s very email llgure In the rcpuhltean side of the campaign T H. Is nearly the whole show. Taft says that Ihe Filipinos prefer him to HryaU. ho there la satlll can nlballeiu practiced In tlioto Islands Is there? A deaf mute Is sulnK his wife out West for a divorce Why didn't lie keep lit* eye# shut aud he never would have known of the trouble? ftpeaker Cannon aasarts that he •Biy tins a "model Income " Thank Roodneas he la mil eiiravagant. for the people would Ihcn be tamed to death. If It be true, as reported, that Keru has a barlwr nephew. It la verje evt dent that he dm n't get a chance to try his skill on iha old man's hlr antes , It was a cruel Jah they save John ’.'ample Orator. when they aid he only welshed night}-eight pounds. luril that moat of that was wind llut he Still claims Atlanta for hi* home Roosevelt a "PU Stick" doesn't seen, to hat» any effect on Itrvnn It must have been a warm cabinet meet mg the other day when they were dtncuawtng Pi; an s tcl-eram The prohibition party has put out nit otsK’toral «4|ckot la (Icoikls If each of thn elector* will vote the ticket it will lie certain of thirteen rotes, at any rate. If the national campaign conttnu ** pi get hotter It will not tie necessary for the titg candidate who la now heading the republlrap ticket to take thn "Muidoea" treatment to reduce bln flesh BP a Wheeler Wilcox says that no wnmasi gets to l>e real serious until she has paused the age of 2k Yet a woman of Ie -* than 70 Is auteg a tuna for »r,a, h of ptuuiiee ta Souih Georg la No Pauline. Mi R»>e«,vclt »*.!l no prfwMrlb go to Africa to hunt M. - game becauw he has tieen unable to find ortopt la this country The truth s«K*i'v to be that an octopus I* tan ktg gnus* la» ths *•* dent s gun. THE RESIGNATION OF GOVERNOR HASKELL. The prompt resign at lon of Governor Haskell, of Oklahoma, as the treasurer of the democratic campaign committee cannot do otherwise than raise him In the estimation of men. In doing this he subordinated p. rsonal feeling to Ihe public good. Upon the altar of party welfare he sacrificed ihe manly Instinct which first of all leads a man when attacked to defend him elf to the last extremity at any cost. He did what only a man can do who has true greatness of spirit, when he re tired while under fire and, while fully capable of defending himself, re lieved ihe party whose success he is seeking no earnestly of any em barrel smer.t which he, holding the position which had been given him, mlghi cause It, Sensational charges had been sprung against. Governor Haskell by President Roosevelt. These charge* were nothing more than old cam paign chares made against Haskell, arid this Is all the authority for them that Mr. Roosevelt could assign when pressed to answer. Such charges are wo lightly made that nobody would use them who has a proper regard for bis standing as a fair minded man. Mr. Roosevelt was compelled to drop the original charge, which he attempted to cover up by trumping up others. A full Investigation would show that there 1- In all of them nothing thul Is condemnable. Governor Haskell, know ing that he has bo n unjustly assailed and that an Investigation would vindicate him, had every right to retain his office as campaign manager until this Investigation should he made. Hut because Tt might possibly Injure the parly he was trying to serve If he remained its treasurer, he at once voluntarily resigned. It requln virtue of an exalted kind for a man accused of wrong doing to retire urid<-r fire, when he knows that he Is guilty of no wrong, and time will vindicate him. This Governor Haskell has done for the party’s good. Ritually commendable In this matter has been the action of Mr. firyan For the third time he |* making the race for the highest office In the world. He Is making splendid progress, and victory is In sight— when here this Haskell matter Is sprung. It seemed to endanger his success Hy promptly cutting liaise from Haskell he would he relieved of this weight. This Is what most men would have done. Few men will hesitate, when It comes to an apparent choice between saving their own life and the sacrlflee of the life of a friend. In sacrificing the friend. Not so Mr Bryan. Relieving Haskell Innocent of the charges preferred by the President, Mr Hryan refused to try to serve hls own cause hy unjustly humiliating a friend. It takes a real man to adopt such n course Now Haskell Is mil, Hls personal enemies doubtless feel gratified, The republicans have nothing more they can harp on, and their candi date may continue hht losing race. Hut this Incident has served to give cause for additional pride and confidence to democrats In their peerless leader In this fight, as well as in the lesser leaders, who com pare so favorably with the republicans in this matter stirred up by tho President In hls desperation on seeing that the republicans arc about to loot their Waterloo, FIGHTING THE GRCAT WHITE PLAGUE During ihe pus! we.-k <!<<' National Congress on Tuberculosis has been In session In Washl! g'on. It has attracted the attention of medi cal men all out the world and much good Is expect* d to result Iron H In fig!) 'lev. Ihe grc.it while p.ague. Consumption D now be moat ilyeml. dos all tho ills which h'liaan •I* eli Is l.elr to. hvn’is * li la one of the few disc sea which has so far hafried all medical skill to cure It or to stay Its course, and la*- came li i irlcs off annually a greater number of victims than any other dlsi use. Tin- meetings in Washington ere attended by delegates h"W si rlvHlfed C'i .litres, mao lg whom t:< • • to me of the jno«t noted tiiboroulnet* specialist* In the world. Their counseling together will certainly advance the cause )n which they are engaged. Otliei diseases its dreadful „> this an now successfully treated. Home have been almost entirely stamped out. Yellow fever, once the terror of Horn hern cities. Is no longer feared Hmall-pox, which once carried off li« victims by thousands, has almost ceased to be a fatal disease For diphtheria a specific has been discovered. Hydrophobia can almost certainly be prevented from developing where the virus, formerly always fatal, ha; been Injected Into the system. Almost all along the line the medio*! profession has made grant advances, but tuberculosis so far has balked all their efforts. There can be Utile doubt that medical science will some day dl.- cover or develop an effective remedy for this din-use. This Is the be lief of nil physicians, and It la t ecause they hold this belief that sonic Of the most eminent men of their profession in this and other countries nr, devoting their lives to lids work. More than once It was liellevid that the proper remedy had been fotyid, or that at least the Investigator was on the threshold of making this great discov ery, as when the famous Dr. lyooh of Berlin experimented with hls serum, but disappointment ended all these high hopes, and yet li may he that Mime of these scientist* were nearer the goal than even now they are aware of. The interchange of views and of results of experiment# among so many learned men must certainly bring a clear er understanding, and may loud to the happy result thitt Is sought. This Is the hope that ta cherished about this meeting. All men must die, Imt consumption, which st-Ues tor Its victims principally the young, aud which so inexorably, slowly hut smvlv drags them down to death, Is such nn abhorrent form of death that more than utl other diseases It Is dreaded and feared, God speed the work of tho emigres* amt the canae for wltlrh II was assembled. A CAUSE FOR EVERYTHING. Man, with all hla boasted learning, la a creature of very short understanding, He sees the forces of nature at work, yet does not un derstand how they are set In motion. He sees th-> results they pro duce, vet he does at know the causes that led to their action. And so he gropes on In blindness. Sometimes, however, hy some ncc.dent or chance a light is thrown, and then he sees and understands, and finds the explanation so simple that ho cannot help but wonder that It htil not been apparent and plain to him all ihe time. During the recent flood the greatest damage was done near the North Augusta bridge 11 re a great brick warehouse was torn down and partly dashed Into the river, the bridge approaches v ere carried away; the railroad tracks and trestle were swept off; even the land, a atrip fifty'to a hundred foot wide disappeared, with tho houses that stood upon It, and groat hanks of mud were piled In the streets. It wss river slit, brought down by the stream, aud deposited here, up to the doors of the houses a.id In some places even the tops of the fences. There were thousands of wagon loads of It !n sight of th ■ North Augusta bridge, composed of minute particles that were packed together as closely as they could get. Thousands of people saw thU. and It caused them to wond - r Such a thing had uever happened before. The river had often before he u out of Its hanks at this place, but never before lefi hero such a mas* of red atJt and drttt from the up-country. They could uot understand wti> li should have done so now. Nobody suspected that prohibit!, >n was the Indirect cause—and yet It was. The light of understanding has fallen upon this subject- by accident as usual, hut now we see and It is so plain that we can ouly wonder that we hud uot seen It ai onee. te rsi» was made as dry as legislative enactment could make h, hy Hie wi.to men selected to m»k • Our i.vwi vt the sunn time our neighbors actons the river established s dispensary near th< bridge, for the combine-, benevolent aud avaricious pur;>ose of assuaging our thirst and getting our money. T'h North Augusta bridge ns the htgi: way to this dttpensarv, became urinous Its name was in every paper and upon every tongue, connected with the boose shot* near its l .iro tl'ia end. In the up country the |>eople read of tt, When the drvness In thetr throats was no; too great to prevent they talked of It Doubtless thin dresnied ut it st night, a vision of glory, this bridge that led to th - ' b.<oae shop How natural then, that the trees, the stumps and the soil should Imbibe this feeling, aud how natural that, when lifted by the water, the; should make straight tor the bridge This they did; and to what cxi,-at ns* revoah-d by the immense m«" that was pthst to clo.c to the bridge as isxslblr al.en the water tell. It had come to the bridge, tad there stopped. The up muiur} i»ai>ers Jed to this discovery. It was the Klhsrtnii Star which commented on the groat qn.otltty of Kihert t minty soil that had low it d<-|.-aped lu \uguata by the loop, and It was the Hartwell Rt.-i which at. i}.-il that It had rtoppr'J c.usc to the bridge, the 1 sweet I'hcu it »e sll as platu at day. THE AUGUSTA HERALD THE HELPFUL STENOGRAPHER, From the uncial writing to the Pittman i«thooks is a long reach. In the olden days the writer was re ' qulred to trace bis thoughts labor iously on paper, employing a method of hand-printing each separate let ter In a character an inch high, which gave the system the name by : which It is known at present. It was tedious work, and this accounts for th- fewness of the letters written then, even by the captains of indus try and kings of finance of those times. Now, how great the difference! The man of bustnes sits In hls easy chair, with hls feet upon the table, and speaks his letter, which Is caught aw he speaks It by a nimble fingered stenographer who then clicks It otf on the typewriter. The result Is a printed letter which Is easy to read, and the great man had nothing to do but to write hls signature at the bot tom . ISo ink stains on his fingers, no aching back, no cramped hand, no tired eyes. He may write a thousand letters with greater ease and In ict* time than the great man of business of the uncial period of letter writing would have been compellel to devote to one letter. Wonderful progress, bringing an agreeable condition for the great man who finds It necessary to write many letters. But it has also Its drawbacks. Mr. John l). Archbold Is experiencing that. now. How did Mr. Hearst get those tell-tale letters? A single let ter gave Irrefutable proof that Sen ator Foraker, one ot the most promi nent law makers and conspicuous candidates of the republican party for president, was Ihe paid agent and servant of tin Standard OH trust. How many of Archbold's letters has Mr. Hearst got—for that lie has more seems certain, and that he could have obtained others In the same way he obtained* that fateful letter Is clear. How did Mr. Hears! get these let ters? Not from Mr. Archbold for he would give them to nobody. Not from the men to whom they were bent, for they have those letters now. They leaked out through tlie steno grapner or typewriter. Just as tho trust magnates tempt senators with money, and succeed las the Foraker casi has shown) in making them be tray and sell out the people who were trusting them, to money will accomplish the same now aud then with stenographers, Mr. Harrinlan has had an experi ence along this line, and so have others. The stenographer and type writer Is an Institution to relieve the great men of the drudgery or writ ing. but it Is an inst it ut ion w'hich also hat its drawbacks. Trustworthy as nearly all of them are, some times one may he tempted hy gold ,o sell out his master’s secrets. There is always danger of secrets so shared being revealed to the wrong party. Mr. Arehbold s experience may lead some big men to personally write more of tneir own letters. Certainly when hereafter trust magnates at tempt to bribe si nature they will write the necessary letters them selves, and not dictate them to their stenographer as Mr. Arehbold seems to jiave done. HE GOT THE VOTE. Mr. James O. Woodward was again (elected mayor of Atlanta last Thurs day. This is a bitter |>i!l to Dr. I.en Broughton it Is likewise sore dls pleasing to many others. But the peo ple have spoken and that ends It. Mr. Woodward has twice before been mayor of Atlanta, and greatly scandalised his city. He Isn't a : .'ratter nor anything of sort, leastways such a charge has never been brought against hint, but he will get op a razee sometimes, and when ihe does he paints the town red. When Mayor Woodward gets well ; tanked tip on liquor nothing short of a cowboy from the wild, wooly West could hold him a candle. That la the reason why some people objected to him being the city's highest official. That Is why he would not been elect ed If It had been any one else. But Woodward was elected, and by a big | majority, over th* combined opposi tion of two other strong candidates. Several days before the election It was clear that Woodward would win. ; He printed a card In the paper* which turned the trick. Card writing is a method of campaigning which is very much employed now-, and all sorts of 'cards are written; but there never was one like Jim Woodward's. It at tacked nobody. It defamed nobody. It trial on nobody's corns—or at least nobody eomplntned of It. For ilt was printed In Greek With the Jielp of a lev loon Woodward (lied It up to look jto his satisfaction, and If he didn't get It right, why no one was the (wiser since there Is nobody in At lanta who could tell the difference. But that card won (he fight The j other raadkUtss didn't publish Greek cards In the papers, consequently ev j cry body who voted for Jim Wood j ward there being no other apparent |reason why a tevet headed man should WHAT OF HON. THOS. E. WATSON’S CANDfOACY. In the great dust that is being raised by the big parties, especially since they have got to the stage where the , president assails the per sonal character of the governor of a state and the governor of a state calls the president a falsifyer by that shorter, uglier word, many peit pie are losing sight altogether of the Georgia candidate for presi dent and almost forget that he is in the race. Mr. Hearst has come to Georgia with his candidates, and was given notice on the front pages of the papers, but of Mr. Watson's candidacy rarely is mention made. An occasional short line paragraph (usually to fire a shaft more or less tipped In venom) and a short news notice in one of the Atlanta papers, sent It by a state correspondent and reciting the fact that Mr. Watson had been In his town and made a speech, is about all that appears in the papers about hls campaign. People who read the daily papers only are led by this to think that his campaign doesn't amount to much, and that a few thousand votes is all that he will get. And this may be the case. But then, again, it may turn out that the good people who have hugged this belief in perfect confidence have a rude awakening coming to them when the votes shall be count ed. For let it be known that Tom Watson is pushing his campaign. Pathetic it may appear, this campaign being made by one man for an ofTice to which he admits himself that he cannot be elected; cam paigning only In one state out of the forty-six which together must elect the president; without any outside aid, without an organized party behind him, without a campaign fund and without a single paper to help him fight his battle. This is what Tom Watson is doing. In any other man It would appear Quixotic, but with him it is not. He pur poses to carry this state, or to come so near it that it will be plain that with only a little help he could have done it; and it is not at all certain that in this he will not succeed. He is stumping the state, making speeches almost every day. These meetings are advertised only in is own paper, The Jeffersonian, and from these notices it may be seen that he is covering the whole state. And the people go to hoar him at these meetings, for the al most invariable, almost stereotyped report of them is, "large attend ance but no enthusiasm; same old speech, with only a little applause: made no converts.” But this may be remembered in connection with these meetings and these reports; Tom Watson has campaigned his home state too often and knows the people to whom he speaks too well to continue the arduous work of continuous speech-making if he found the result disappointing. The fruit of these speeches will be seen when the returns of the elec tion come in. Through the Farmers’ Union, not officially, but socially, Mr, Watson Is in close touch with the farmers, who are largely old populists. They are quiet people who do not make much fuss, but who make up their minds how they will vote and then vote that way in spite of all that may be said and done. And this is the class of voters who will march to the polls on November 3 and vote, not for Bryan oy Taft, not for Hisgen or Chafin, not for either of the socialist candidates, but for the Georgia candidate, Hon, Thos. E. Watson. Advices have been received in this city from sources that are re garded as well informed and reliable, and not deluded by partiality for Watson, that he is practically certain of a majority in six counties of this congressional district. And while this is his home district he may be expected to poll an equally strong vote in other sections of the state. That Mr. Watson will get a plurality of the votes nobody seems to believe. But that he will poll a much larger vote than some people now think is certain. vote for him—did so because the argu ment contained in that Greek card ap pealed to him or he pretended that it did. He would be regarded by his acquaintances as a greal scholar. The young man could put on an air of su perior wisdom as he syly intimated to his best girl that he voted for Jim Woodward, who had that Greek card in the papers. The old man voted for him because he thought this would impress his boys with hls wis dom, and the boys voted for him to make the old man feel satisfied that the money he had spent for their edu cation had not been wasted. The boss voted for the man who addressed the voters In Greek to show his superior ity of his men, and his men voted the same ticket to show what was in them. It was an opportunity for all who claimed to have some learning to prove it to the doubters wfiich they embraced, and Ihe result was shown in the count of Ihe votes. That tt was Jim Woodward's Greek card which did It is proven by the fact that he received a far larger vote than on any previous occasion. He is the same Jim Woodward he was be fore, only he had not written Greek cards In any of his previous cara [ paigns. It was the Greek card which turned the trick. BERDUMA GRASS FOR LAWNS. It is a curious trait of human na ture that we value the things that are difficult to get more than those things which can be more easily ob tained. Something that Is made in France or Germany possesses grea'er value in our eves than something that is made at home; and something that wo must buy is appreciated more than something we may have with out buying And all the time the things made at home may be really the best. It Is but another Hlustni , tion of the truth expressed by Gray when he sang that "Distance lends enchantment to the view. Here is Bermuda grass, for in stance. "Joint grass." it is contempt uously called by the farmers, who i regard it as a nuisance And yet it is one of the most valuable grasses (that grows. It ran stand dry. hot weather better than other grasses, jlt makes a Utter pasture for horses, j cattle and hogs than sny other grass, i It enriches land upon which it grows instead of Impoverishing It. And It holds the soli together so that feet , ter than almost sny other grass It *»i;l protect It against being washed Yet our farmers experiment and | spend money on other grasses, while they fail to appreciate Bermuda and fight incessantly to keep It out of their farms And we are still more unwise in this regsrd in the city. Here we have little use for gras* except for lawn imrposes. But there are thous ands of little lawns In the city upon which the owners spend much care and not a little money They dig and they fertilize, and buy all man ner ot fancy lawn seed*, clover seeds and everything else that goes by the j name of grass seed and is sold la the I seed stores, But Bermuda grass they ignore almost completely. I Yet it is the finest lawn grass in ; the w-orld. It comes green earliest : in the spring, remains greenest dur ing dry spells in summer, and some times remains green all winter. It | does not require reseeding every | year. It never dies out in spots. It prevents the laud from washing, (it is in all respects the best grass for the lawn. But it costs nothing. We do not have to send far off to get the seed. Consequently we can't appreciate it, and continue to plant clover and lawn mixtures, worry year after year, and then never have a perfect lawn. If Bermuda grass seed had to be im ported, or could not be obtained ex cept hy paying a high price for it, we should have hundreds of fine Ber muda grass lawns in the city. But they can be had without ail this, simply for the trouble of one time planting; and the consequence is we will not have it. Is this not strange, but true? TAFT'S GEORGIA COOK. Attention continues to be directed to the fact that Mr. Taft's cook is A Georgia product, a negress from La grange, and that to her nurh of his greatness Is dtte. Mr. Taft loves to eat. and she knows just exactly how to concoct dishes to suit his appetite, and so has contributed not only to his greatness of body, but. if it be true that special foods nourish the ’ brain, to his greatness of mind as well, whatever its stature may be. Taft's cook, it is said, is one of those famous negresses who were “natehel horn” rooks, a tribe that is rapidly passing away and will soon be extinct. She can neithe'- read nor write; She never attended a cooking school, hut she grew up with numer- \ oils famous recipes for rooking dishes l that are wholesome and toothsome. So she has cooked for Judge Taft for years, and has been in a large meas ure the builder of his greatness. The New York Press, speaking ol Taft’s Georgia cook, plaintively says (hat 'it almost saddens a Yankee to think of what the old-fashioned negro cook sol for breakfast and dinner. Think of Taft being made in Geor gia!" And here Is how It describes Taft at his feed: "Taft, of course, is a good trencher man. He la a gourmet without be ing a gourmand, an epicure without | being a glutton. At the table he is ! not finical He doesn't smell about his food HeJ* never looking for vio lations of the alleged pure food regti Int ions He eats with much gusto i whatever is set before him. which is the beat evidence in the world of a sane mind In a sane body. He has hot rolls for breakfast, Georgia style —the kind that rise five inches in the i pan and browned top and bottom, can !be pulled apart like *o many fine pieces of snow-white felt. Jerusa . lem! Plenty of butter! Or ham ' grav>! Taft loves ham and bacon SUNDAY, SEPT. 27. Dorr Clothes. 1 Another Reason Why- In ordering a Dorr suit, not only are you assured of getting the Best that tailoring art can supply, but there's also the advantage of having the largest stock from which t« make a choice. Ample capital aids the Dorr taste to secure the choicest in thf market. Get Measured NOW DORR Tailoring, Furnishings for Men of Taste DISINFECTANTS NOW IS IHE TIME fOtISE THIM SI)N SANITARY FLUID. The ideal disinfectant. True deod erizer and germicide; a powerful anti septic and purifier for the sanitary purification of dwellings, schools, hos pitals, water closets, sinks, slaughter houses, stables, etc. One pint 20c One quart 35c One gallon SI.OO Five gallons, per gal 75c Special prices made on Barrels. N. L. WILLET SEED COMPANY 309 JACKSON ST. ’Phone 498. T. G. BAILIE & COMPANY 832 BROAD ST. Large assortment of Wall Paper and Compe tent Force of Workmen to do Prompt Work. Big Stock of MATTING, CARPETS AND RUGS. REASONABLE PRICES ON EVERYTHING ANNOUNCEMENT! On arcount of the very large increase in the volume of our business we found it neressary to increase our force of cutters we have been extremely fortu nate in securing the serv ices of Mr. A. J. Peters, the mention of hls name being n sufficient guarantee that our former high standard of excel lence in the cutting department will be maintained. We have also Increased the capacity of our workrooms and with the largest stock of Foreign Wool ens In the entire South we are equipped to demonstrate to you that "the proof of the pudding Is In the eating thereof" and not in the emission of hot air. JNO. B. JONES, Importer and Tailor. Smothered chicken. Toasted cheese. Old fashioned grit*. Lye hominy. Bless my stall! Waffles. Hoe cakes. Corn pone. Ash Cake* oh. what s the use? A candidate that revela In such food ought <o carrj the eoU4 South." * »